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The Top 15 Tech Myths
We love lists -- you should have figured that out by now. This time, PC World came up with 15 tech myths, bursting one bubble at a time. We list a few highlights here.Using third-party ink in your printer voids the warranty
Just plain not true. Of course, if the third-party ink damages the printer, then you're out of luck. But simply using third-party ink does not let Epson off the hook if your printer suddenly bursts into flames.
'Unlimited' cell phone data access is really unlimited
Think that extra $19 a month has you covered for all the data (e-mail, downloads, Web surfing) you want on your cell phone? Think again. Verizon's Terms of Service (TOS) forbids streaming media, uploading and downloading files and even has a 5 gigabyte-per-month cap on data. Cingular/AT&T also forbids media streaming and file sharing but has no data cap. And Sprint says it "reserve[s] the right to limit or suspend any heavy, continuous data usage that adversely impacts [its] network performance or hinders access to [its] network." Annoyingly vague, to put it lightly.
Macs are virus-free
Despite what the Cult of Mac tells you Macs are not 100 percent safe. A security researcher named Dino Dai Zovi took home a $10,000 prize for remotely hijacking a MacBook Pro. It took less than 10 hours to discover a security hole in Quicktime and set up a Web page to exploit it. Also, January was The Month of Apple Bugs as a pair of hackers revealed a new security hole in the OS for each day. In February the first worm virus for OSX was discovered. Macs are still more secure than Windows PCs, but because they're less popular, they tend to be less of a target.
From PC World
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